Sen. Dennis Kruse, who tried and failed in the last legislative session to let schools teach creationism along with evolution, said Tuesday he’s trying a new approach: Requiring teachers to provide evidence if students challenge their science lessons.

Kruse, an Auburn Republican who is chairman of the Senate Education and Career Development Committee, said he will dub it “truth in education.”

“If a student thinks something isn’t true, then they can question the teacher and the teacher would have to come up with some kind of research to support that what they are teaching is true or not true.”

... “This one’s fairly new,” said Gerry Wheeler, executive director of the National Science Teachers Association. “This is a creative new evolution that the creationists are going to.”

2. It is happening all over

4. Who thinks Kruse will the first person ranting...

when somewhere down the road after that shithead gets his way and gets creationism on the agenda, some educated 5th grader forces a science teacher who of-course doesn't believe in creationism to provide proof of creationism.

5. One nation under god,

6. Exactly the other way round makes WAY more sense (and leads to the scientific method).

teacher: "It happened because of A."
student: "I don't believe that."
teacher: "Well, what could be the answer, if not A?"
student: "I've heard it's B."
teacher: "How could you find out, whether A or B is correct?"
...

It's the opposite of indoctrination.
It's the opposite of belief.
It's skeptical thinking.
It's doubt.
It's getting out of your comfort-zone and doing some research and reasoning.